• Title/Summary/Keyword: Analogs

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Superoxide Dismutase Mimetic Activity of Cu(II)-Salicylic Acid Analogs

  • Yong, Chul-Soon
    • Journal of Pharmaceutical Investigation
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    • v.22 no.3
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    • pp.65-76
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    • 1992
  • The superoxide dismutase (SOD)-mimetic activities of copper complexes of a series of salicylic acid (SA) analogs were tested and compared to the activity of bovine erythrocyte SOD using ferricytochrome c reduction assay. Stability constants of copper complexes were measured potentiometrically using SCOGS2 program. In the presence of 10 g/l albumin, all the copper complexes lost their SOD mimetic activities. Multiple regression analysis was employed for the statistical comparisons between the SOD mimetic activity and their physicochemical properties. Correlation exists for the SOD mimetic activity and steric parameter $(E_s)$ and/or electronic parameter $({\Sigma}{\sigma})$ in xanthine/xanthine oxidase (XOD) system, demonstrating that E, plays a key role in SOD activity whereas ${\Sigma}{\sigma}$ influences it to a lesser extent. The protective effect of copper complexes against membrane damage was measured by counting D-glucose released frm $EG_s$. D-glucose and XOD were entrapped within $EG_s$ and acetaldehyde was used as a substrate for XOD. In this membrane model system using $EG_s$, hydrophobic parameter $({\Sigma}{\pi})$ is of most importance, producing parabolic equation while $E_s$, and ${\Sigma}{\sigma}$ appear to playa minor role in protection against D-glucose release. In summary, to design an efficient SOD mimetic, stability, steric factor, lipophilicity and redox potential should be considered.

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Molecular Modeling, Synthesis, and Screening of New Bacterial Quorum-sensing Antagonists

  • Kim, Cheol-Jin;Kim, Jae-Eun;Park, Hyung-Yeon;Mclean, Robert J.C.;Kim, Chan-Kyung;Jeon, Jong-Ho;Yi, Song-Se;Kim, Young-Gyu;Lee, Yoon-Sik;Yoon, Je-Yong
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.17 no.10
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    • pp.1598-1606
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    • 2007
  • A new series comprising 7 analogs of N-(sulfanyl ethanoyl)-L-HSL derivatives, 2 analogs of N-(fluoroalkanoyl)-$_L$-HSL derivatives, N-(fluorosulfonyl)-L-HSL, and 2,2-dimethyl butanoyl HSL were synthesized using a solid-phase organic synthesis method. Each of the 11 synthesized compounds was analyzed using NMR and mass spectroscopies, and molecular modeling studies of the 11 ligands were performed using SYBYL packages. Thereafter, a bacterial test was designed to identify their quorum-sensing inhibition activity and antifouling efficacy. Most of the synthesized compounds were found to be effective as quorum-sensing antagonists, where antagonist screening revealed that 10 among the 11 synthesized ligands were able to antagonize the quorum sensing of A. tumefaciens.

In Vitro Determination of Intracellular Phosphorylated Metabolites of Antiviral Pyrimidine Analogs (Zidovudine의 In Vitro 세포내 대사물의 측정을 통한 약효 검색법 개발)

  • Han, Kyu-Won;Kim, Kil-Soo
    • Journal of Pharmaceutical Investigation
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    • v.32 no.4
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    • pp.285-290
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    • 2002
  • In order to assay the efficacy of newly synthesized antiviral compounds, in vitro studies of their active intracellular phosphorylated metabolites were established as compared with Zidovudine (ZDV). Antiviral base analogs require intracellular phosphorylation prior to the inhibition of HIV replication. Therefore, antiviral drugs concentrations in plasma have not reflected any direct relationship with activity or toxicity. A method has been developed to measure the concentration of total phosphorylated metabolites inside peripheral blood mononuclear cells using modified commercial radioimmunoassay (RIA). ZDV 5'-monophosphate was synthesized and used as a procedural control for RIA modification. PBMCs were isolated from whole blood and incubated with ZDV for 20 h to allow metabolic phosphorylation. Viable cells were extracted overnight with 60% methanol. After evaporation, the extract was reconstituted in Tris buffer. Samples were split into two fractions, one of which was treated with alkaline phosphatase (AP) to liberate phosphate groups. Concentrations of phosphorylated metabolites were determined by subtracting thε concentration of non-AP-treated fraction from that of the treated fraction. Recovery of phosphorylated ZDV from cell extracts was approximately 90%, and reproducibility was acceptable (coefficients of variation <15% for concentrations${\geq}$0.25 ng/mL). Intracellular concentrations $(0.135{\sim}5.019\;nmole/10^6\;cells)$ followed a nonlinear dose-response relationship over the range $0.015{\sim}2.996mM$ extracellular ZDV, with concentration-dependant saturation.

The Influence of the N-Terminal Region of Antimicrobial Peptide Pleurocidin on Fungal Apoptosis

  • Choi, Hyemin;Lee, Dong Gun
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.23 no.10
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    • pp.1386-1394
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    • 2013
  • In our previous study, the 25-mer antimicrobial peptide pleurocidin (Ple) had been thought to induce apoptosis in Candida albicans. This study demonstrated that reactive oxygen species (ROS) production was a major cause of Ple-induced apoptosis. Four truncated analogs were synthesized to understand the functional roles in the N- and C-terminal regions of Ple on the apoptosis. Ple, Ple (4-25), Ple (1-22), and Ple (1-19) produced ROS, including hydroxyl radicals, on the order of [Ple > Ple (1-22) > Ple (4-25) > Ple (1-19)], whereas Ple (7-25) did not induce any ROS production. The results suggested that the N-terminal deletion affected the ROS-inducing activities much more than that of the C-terminal deletion, and net hydrophobicity [Ple > Ple (1-22) > Ple (4-25) > Ple (1-19) > Ple (7-25)] was related to ROS generation rather than other primary factors like net charge. Hence, we focused on the N-terminal-truncated peptides, Ple (4-25) and Ple (7-25), and examined other apoptotic features, including mitochondrial membrane depolarization, caspase activation, phosphatidylserine externalization, and DNA and nuclear fragmentation. The results also confirmed the disappearance of apoptotic activity of Ple (7-25) by the truncation of the N-terminal region (1-6) and the specific activity patterns between Ple and analogs. In conclusion, the N-terminal region of Ple played an important role in apoptosis.